Reject this silly blackwashing and stick to reading the original English folklore.
The more the establishment promotes such blasphemy, the more they alienate younger Englishmen from their history and traditions, just as their fucked up ruling class is succeeding in making native white Englishmen a persecuted minority.
Support all organizations seeking to revive respect for English history and tradition, like the Lotus Eaters.
Just discovered this organization and would like any feedback from UK citizens about its presence and potential for influence: https://www.libertydefenders.org/
Looks somewhat slapdash/amateurish, but it's ideologically sound.
It's waaaay more Welsh than English here. The narrator is an "Englishman" (Saxon) but raised by the Britons (after miraclously surviving their ritual sacrifice as an infant) and entirely identifying with them:
These are the tales of the last days before the great darkness descended. These are the tales of the land we call Lloegyr, which means the Lost Lands, the country that was once ours but which our enemies now call England.
The author usually writes about the English, including in The Saxon Chronicles / The Last Kingdom (the Viking invasion of England).
Reject this silly blackwashing and stick to reading the original English folklore.
The more the establishment promotes such blasphemy, the more they alienate younger Englishmen from their history and traditions, just as their fucked up ruling class is succeeding in making native white Englishmen a persecuted minority.
Support all organizations seeking to revive respect for English history and tradition, like the Lotus Eaters.
Just discovered this organization and would like any feedback from UK citizens about its presence and potential for influence: https://www.libertydefenders.org/
Looks somewhat slapdash/amateurish, but it's ideologically sound.
It's waaaay more Welsh than English here. The narrator is an "Englishman" (Saxon) but raised by the Britons (after miraclously surviving their ritual sacrifice as an infant) and entirely identifying with them:
The author usually writes about the English, including in The Saxon Chronicles / The Last Kingdom (the Viking invasion of England).
OK, I was historically vague. For political reasons, I consider the entire UK to be "England." Is that wrong?
Don't tell the other countries nationalists lol
I'd rather see a return to conflict among Scotland, England and Ireland than I would like to see the continued dilution of English culture by ay-rabs.